Soldier model, Number of the soldier, Number of extras, Mass of the men兵種或其乘員, 數量, 附屬單位數量, 衝擊質量

Mount 騎乘座騎

, elephant +4

Type of animal or vehicle ridden on and its effect座騎或載具種類及其影響效果

Engine and Ship 攻城器與戰船

Siege engine or ship攻城器具或船隻種類

Attributes 特殊屬性

no_custom, sea_faring, hide_forest, hardy, can_withdraw

A miscellanious list of attributes and abilities the unit may have兵種特殊屬性或能力

Formation 陣形

2, 3, 2.4, 2.4, 2, square

Soldier spacing side to side, Front to back for close formation, Side to side, Front to back for loose formation, Number of rankings, Formations possible for the unit密集陣形左右間距, 前後間距, 鬆散陣形左右間距, 前後間距, 橫列數, 陣形

Hit points 生命值

1, 0

Hit points of man, Hit points of mount or attached animal (Ridden horses and camels do not have separate hit points)生命值, 附屬單位生命值(座騎無額外的生命值)

With a land so heavily invaded and settled as India, it's no surprise that the secret to a tribe's origin is well woven in a tapestry of a thousand different peoples over thousands of years. The Gakhars of the Punjab are one such design upon the woven canvas of India, and the strands that their image originates from are an uncertainty to all but the Gakhars themselves. They find their ancestry in the semi-mythological dynasty of the Kayanians, the rulers of Ancient Persia in the times of the Avesta and the Shahnameh. Prior to their arrival in the Punjab, it is believed that a son of a Kayanian ruler conquered a part of Tibet, and his descendants would rule and extend their dominion into the Kashmir region. With the arrival of Mahmud of Ghazni into Northern India, Gakhar Shah, a son of the ruler of this wayward Aryan Clan, would come into the services of Mahmud, and upon gaining possession of the Potohar Plateau, would remain there and give rise to the Gakhari tribe. Others dispute that the natives of the Punjab's Potohar Plateau gave rise to the Gakhar Clan. Whatever the case, the Punjabi traditions of aristocratic, agrarian warriors remain true for even the simplest of Gakhari tribesmen. Hearty from a industrious existence as farmers of the meager villages across the Punjab, these poorer Gakhari fight as fleet-footed skirmishers, wielding short stabbing spear along with their bamboo javelins. They are not without merits on the battlefield, but remain men of ill discipline, moral and abilities, useful as skirmishers and harassers, but little more. While one might argue the lack of armor in the Indian subcontinent is a help instead of a hindrance, their lack of protection and ill discipline forces them to behave as irregular skirmishers, eager enough for battle but lacking in commitment.

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Ownership factions 擁有勢力

The Kingdom of Georgia

Gakhari Tribesmenmissile infantryUnarmored Skirmishers, best utilized to harass enemy forces and to fall upon their distracted foe's flank and rear.

The Kingdom of Makuria

Gakhari Tribesmenmissile infantryUnarmored Skirmishers, best utilized to harass enemy forces and to fall upon their distracted foe's flank and rear.

The Kingdom of Jerusalem

Gakhari Tribesmenmissile infantryUnarmored Skirmishers, best utilized to harass enemy forces and to fall upon their distracted foe's flank and rear.

The Imamate of Oman

Gakhari Tribesmenmissile infantryUnarmored Skirmishers, best utilized to harass enemy forces and to fall upon their distracted foe's flank and rear.

The Khwarezm Shah

Gakhari Tribesmenmissile infantryUnarmored Skirmishers, best utilized to harass enemy forces and to fall upon their distracted foe's flank and rear.

The Kypchak Confederacy

Gakhari Tribesmenmissile infantryUnarmored Skirmishers, best utilized to harass enemy forces and to fall upon their distracted foe's flank and rear.

The Ghorid Sultanate

Gakhari Tribesmenmissile infantryUnarmored Skirmishers, best utilized to harass enemy forces and to fall upon their distracted foe's flank and rear.

The Sultanate of Ghazni

Gakhari Tribesmenmissile infantryUnarmored Skirmishers, best utilized to harass enemy forces and to fall upon their distracted foe's flank and rear.

The Solanki Rajputs

Gakhari Tribesmenmissile infantryUnarmored Skirmishers, best utilized to harass enemy forces and to fall upon their distracted foe's flank and rear.

The Kingdom of Armenia

Gakhari Tribesmenmissile infantryUnarmored Skirmishers, best utilized to harass enemy forces and to fall upon their distracted foe's flank and rear.

The Great Seljuks

Gakhari Tribesmenmissile infantryUnarmored Skirmishers, best utilized to harass enemy forces and to fall upon their distracted foe's flank and rear.

The Malikate of Sindh

Gakhari Tribesmenmissile infantryUnarmored Skirmishers, best utilized to harass enemy forces and to fall upon their distracted foe's flank and rear.

The Eastern Roman Empire

Gakhari Tribesmenmissile infantryUnarmored Skirmishers, best utilized to harass enemy forces and to fall upon their distracted foe's flank and rear.

The Abbasid Caliphate

Gakhari Tribesmenmissile infantryUnarmored Skirmishers, best utilized to harass enemy forces and to fall upon their distracted foe's flank and rear.

The Ayyubid Sultanate

Gakhari Tribesmenmissile infantryUnarmored Skirmishers, best utilized to harass enemy forces and to fall upon their distracted foe's flank and rear.

The Turkish Sultanate

Gakhari Tribesmenmissile infantryUnarmored Skirmishers, best utilized to harass enemy forces and to fall upon their distracted foe's flank and rear.

The Mongols

Gakhari Tribesmenmissile infantryUnarmored Skirmishers, best utilized to harass enemy forces and to fall upon their distracted foe's flank and rear.

Rebels

Gakhari Tribesmenmissile infantryUnarmored Skirmishers, best utilized to harass enemy forces and to fall upon their distracted foe's flank and rear.